The Oregonian Portland transportation bureau hires manager convicted of felony tied to corruption probe By Elliot Njus December 30, 2016 The Portland Transportation Bureau's pick to oversee its construction projects has a felony conviction for lying on tax documents tied to a federal corruption investigation that sent a Beltway councilman to prison. Prosecutors said Millicent Williams directed $110,000 from the Washington, D.C.-based nonprofit she ran toward an inaugural ball at the request of the councilman, then signed tax forms that misrepresented the money's purpose. Though she pleaded guilty in 2013 and served 15 months of probation, documents show, she was not accused of personally benefiting from the misdirection of funds. Williams, who now works for a city outside of Dallas, Texas, said she was open with Portland officials about the conviction during the hiring process. As the bureau's capital projects division manager, she will oversee a staff of 12 and manage capital improvement projects that total $60 million to $80 million. City officials said her career in the nonprofit and public sectors, during which she rose to the post of Washington's director for homeland security, outweighed her criminal history. She was one of several people implicated in the federal investigation of Harry Thomas Jr., who was accused of embezzling more than $350,000 in public funds. He was convicted in 2012 and served three years in prison. At the time, Williams ran now-defunct DC Children and Youth Investment Trust Corp., a nonprofit which distributed public funds to youth programs. In 2009, Thomas asked Williams for a grant to pay for a black-tie inaugural ball that had already occurred and hadn't covered its costs. In an interview Thursday with The Oregonian/OregonLive, Williams said the event had been described to her as a venue for at-risk youth to celebrate the election of President Barack Obama, which she believed would be a proper use of the funds. Williams said she later questioned whether her nonprofit could give funds to the political organization holding the event, but agreed to send the money to another nonprofit called Youth Tech that forwarded it the ball's organizers. "I didn't know that the other organization did not do what was supposed to have been done," Williams said. "Had I been more judicious in my approach, as we had been for other grants, it probably would have been detected. But I was not." She also, according to a signed court statement, ordered revisions to the grant agreement to make it less overtly partisan and more in line with the fund's intended purpose. Document: Statement of offense signed by Williams She later signed tax documents that listed the beneficiary as Youth Tech, not the councilman or political organization as beneficiaries. Williams said she hadn't read the document before she signed it, but prosecutors said she was responsible for its false statements. "Every day I wish I would have made a different decision," she said, adding that the experience "makes me much more cautious, contentious and observant than I ever would have been to make sure nothing like this, at least on my watch, ever happens again." By the time the Thomas investigation began, Williams was serving as Washington's director of homeland security, a post she held under two mayors. She resigned in January 2012, saying at the time she didn't want her involvement to be a distraction, and pleaded guilty to the tax charge in 2013. Williams said Thursday she had made an effort to "clean up" at the nonprofit by instituting new grant procedures. She also said she reduced her own salary, from the $250,000 her predecessor made to $160,000. Portland officials said Williams rose to the top of a field of more than 40 candidates. Transportation Bureau Director Leah Treat, who previously worked in Washington and was aware of the case, signed off on the hire, spokesman John Brady said. (She was not made available to comment on the hire.) Outgoing transportation Commissioner Steve Novick also was aware of Williams' past. Treat said in a statement that she believed Williams' two decades of experience in public sector and nonprofit management would be an asset to the bureau. "She was chosen after a highly competitive and rigorous selection process," Treat said. "She has been very forthcoming about her court case, and I have been impressed with her honesty and her willingness to take responsibility for her actions. I believe she has learned from her mistakes." Williams joins a bureau that is still shaking off a major corruption scandal of its own. Former Portland parking manager Ellis K. McCoy, was sentenced last year for accepting bribes in exchange for steering multimillion-dollar parking meter contracts to two companies between 2002 and 2011. FBI agents showed up unannounced to raid his city office and Hillsboro home in August 2011. Brady said Williams' role would be to coordinate work with various government agencies, similar to her work as security manager in D.C. She would not choose contractors or vendors, Brady said, and another manager would be responsible for oversight of the capital improvement budget. She will report to Planning, Policy and Projects Group Manager Art Pearce, who reports to Treat. The hire also comes a year after Portland passed a strict "Ban the Box" policy, which prohibits employers from asking prospective employees about their criminal history until after making a conditional job offer. Williams disclosed her felony conviction to a city human resources manager before applying, but interviewers weren't told of it until she was named one of four finalists. Williams starts in Portland in mid-January, filling a position that's been vacant for five years but which will oversee a growing list of projects. She'll earn an annual salary of $112,000. Housing crisis took center stage in 2016, will keep it in 2017 By Elliot Njus December 30, 2016 Renters felt the effects of the housing crisis years ago, when their leases started climbing at a much faster rate than their paychecks. So did would-be homebuyers, who scrambled to scrape together down payments in one of the country's hottest housing markets only to find themselves in bidding wars with all the hallmarks of a flash sale. But for Portland and the metro area, 2016 marks the year the housing crisis went mainstream. Affordability commanded a nearly single-minded focus at the ballot box. In November, Portland voters overwhelmingly approved a $258 million bond for affordable housing and unseated a city commissioner in favor of a political novice who campaigned chiefly on housing. Renters, stretched financially and pushed geographically toward Portland's outskirts and suburbs, loudly demanded solutions -- joined in some cases by powerful business interests who saw the issue as a threat to the city's otherwise growing economy. That drove state lawmakers to lift a longstanding ban on affordable housing mandates, creating an opening for Portland to approve its historic inclusionary zoning policy just a few months later. "Housing and issues around homelessness have truly become top-of-mind issues for all Portlanders," said Commissioner Dan Saltzman, who oversees the city's Housing Bureau. "That urgency's been driven home, either by rent increases individuals are experiencing or (because) they know people in unaffordable housing situations." The city's concentration of struggling renters has only grown. Rents have climbed 30 percent since 2012, according to data firm CoStar, a number forecasters say will continue to grow. The median-priced two-bedroom apartment in Portland is now beyond reach for the average household in nearly half the neighborhoods, according to the city's annual State of Housing report. That stat is even more dismal for the average Latino, Black, Native American and single-parent households, who cannot afford the median rent in any neighborhood, the report found. The median-priced home in the metro area, meanwhile, hovers around $350,000, up nearly 12 percent from a year earlier. Household income grew at half that rate last year. Rising rents have priced people out of their homes and scattered them to the outer reaches of the city and beyond. As those ranks increased, so too did their calls for action. In 2012, Margot Black's family was evicted from a rented home without cause and thrust into a highly competitive rental market with just a few weeks' notice. The Lewis & Clark College math professor wrote to public officials at the time to say there should be more protections for renters. They responded with sympathy, but little more. Two years later, Black started to see more complaints online about the rental market. What's more, the postings appeared in communities focused on other topics, such as parenting. "The inability to find housing when you were looking for it was going from inconvenient to crisis, really fast," Black said. "People were starting to feel like it wasn't normal." Groups started to coalesce around housing issues. Black founded Portland Tenants United, an ad-hoc tenants group that picketed landlords while pushing for rent control and an end to no-cause evictions. And a Facebook group called The Shed -- named after a particularly grating for-rent ad asking $900 a month for what appeared to be, well, a shed -- was founded by bookseller Chloe Eudaly, who would go on to upset Commissioner Steve Novick for a seat on the Portland City Council. "I've never seen this level of interest and engagement on housing issues before," Eudaly said. "I attribute part of that to the internet as an organizing tool and a way to get information out to the public.
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